Of the Brewers' 66 remaining games, 40 are against six of the eight teams in the National League playoff race.

As we pass the midway point of July, the Brewers have just two wins this month.

The good news? Sunday's win ended a seven-game losing streak and kept Milwaukee atop the National League Central standings.

The bad news? Things are only going to get more difficult in the second half.

For much of this season, it's been the Brewers and everybody else in the NL Central. They've been in first place since April 5 and held sole possession of that spot for more than 90 days, from April 9 through July 11.

Now, it's the Brewers and the Cardinals and the Reds and the Pirates. It's a four-team race, with Pittsburgh just 3.5 games back in fourth place.

Looking ahead, there's good and bad news for the Crew.

Let's start with the bad this time.

In going 53-43 over their first 96 games, the Brewers beat up on somewhat weaker competition. The combined winning percentage of their 16 first-half opponents was .486, or 41 games under .500 over the course of 1517 games.

For the next 66 games, Milwaukee faces 12 opponents with a combined .501 mark in the first half, having won two more than they lost in 1142 games.

That includes coming out of the break in Washington against the first-place Nationals. The Brewers also have six games each against the NL West-leading Dodgers and Giants, 10 with the Cardinals, nine more with the Reds and six against the Pirates.

That adds up to 40 games — 61 percent of their remaining schedule — against six of the eight teams in the NL playoff race.

If they're going to win the division, the Brewers are going to have to earn it.

So what's the good news?

Over the last six seasons dating back to their Wild Card berth in 2008, the Brewers have a .550 second-half winning percentage. They've won 43 more than they've lost. Milwaukee lost 15 more than it won over the same six first halves, for a .486 mark.

Even with this season included, the Brewers are just 317-322 in the first half over the last seven years. Just once — in '09 — have they been worse in the second half.

And only twice — in '08 and '14 — have they scored more runs than their opponents before the All-Star break. But just as the winning percentages have risen, so too have their second-half run differentials.

The Brewers have outscored opponents by 174 runs in the second half, while giving up 121 more runs than they've plated in the first.

Between their tougher schedule and the Brewers being a second-half team in recent years, something's got to give.

Either way, it should make for a thrilling playoff race down the stretch.

According to Fangraphs, the Brewers have just a 45.5 percent chance of reaching the playoffs, while being projected to win 85 games. In their season-to-date stats model, those odds go up to 52.7 percent for the Crew.

The second-place Cardinals, on the other hand, are projected to win 86 games, with a 61 percent or 54.6 percent chance, depending on the model.

Most surprising is the third-place Reds having the best odds of the group — 59.4 percent — in the season-to-date stats model.

In the Baseball Prospectus projection at MLB.com, the Brewers' odds are at just 51 percent, up from 46 percent last week, but well below the Cards at 66 percent.

STAT OF THE WEEK

2. Hits each for Jonathan Lucroy and Aramis Ramirez on Tuesday night. They're the first teammates with multi-hit performances in the same All-Star Game since Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez did so in 1998.

BEST INSTAGRAMS

Brewers pitcher Yovani Gallardo took in Wednesday's soccer game at Miller Park.

A beautiful rainbow appeared beyond Target Field during the Home Run Derby.

Carlos Gomez shared this photo of his son during the All-Star festivities.

THEY SAID IT

Ramirez: "It was tough, last year was a tough year. Compared to this year, we're in first place. It doesn't get any better than that."

Lucroy on Derek Jeter: "I think [Adam Wainwright] was trying to get him out. We were going to win. I can tell you that right now. I'm back there catching, and I'm calling the game to win. If that ball is located down, it's probably an out."

Gomez on the Brewers' lineup: "From the leadoff to the (eighth hitter), we have guys who can damage to the opposing team. This season when you look in general at the team, we are a better team completely."